BNP leaflets about Muslim extremism have been slammed as an “abominable distortion of Islam” by Croydon Mosque leaders.
The leaflets – claiming that Islam is a “threat to us all” and calling on people to join the party’s “crusade against Islamification of Britain” – were sent to residents in South Norwood last week, shortly after the attempted terrorist attacks on London and Glasgow.
After getting one of the leaflets resident Mahmood Tufail said: “There’s a lot of lies in the leaflet and I got the impression people are trying to stir up trouble – especially with what’s been going on in the past few weeks.”
Mr Tufail said people were now feeling “very nervous”. “I’ve spoken among my friends,” he added, “We don’t know what to do about this. I just hope the leaflets won’t inflame non-Muslims against us. With all that is going on, people are very nervous. This leaflet creates the wrong stereotypes. The people who carry out these extremist acts are a tiny, fringe minority. Unfortunately, this backfires on everyone else.”
A spokesman for Croydon Mosque called the leaflets “inflammatory” and said: “The vast majority of people will recognise it for the blatant scare tactics that it deploys and which have become the hallmark of the BNP.”
A BNP spokesman said: “All we’re trying to do is raise the issue that Islam is not compatible with the British way of life. We are a Christian country and Islam is destroying democracy.”
Croydon Guardian, 20 July 2007
See also BNP regional voices, 21 July 2007
In today’s
“Who ought to be Mayor? The man with the vision who says: ‘I am proud of London’s reputation as the most diverse city in the world where the contribution all communities is celebrated and people’s freedom of religious expression is respected as it is one of the most essential of our civil liberties. Attacks on the rights of Muslim people to express their faith as they choose are ultimately a threat to everybody’s rights to freedom of religious and cultural expression. It should be the right of every individual to be able live their life as they wish, so long as it does not do harm to any other individual. This ability to be who you are and live as you choose is what has made London a magnet for people bringing their ideas and energy to make this the successful and dynamic city that it is’ (Ken Livingstone, June 2007).